The club has a railroad crossing display sign that uses 12 volt automotive bulbs. Unfortunately the power supply has croaked.
There are lots of 12 volt automotive alternating flasher units out there, some are cheap and some are fairly pricey. The problem with the cheap ones is that there is no way to adjust the flashing pattern to mimic a prototypical flashing pattern with the ‘slow’ lighting and darkening of the bulbs. There are also quite a few model railroad crossing signal flashers but nobody seems to offer a system that will use 12 volt bulbs.
We would like a prototypical flashing pattern without spending a lot of bucks. If we can’t get the prototypical pattern without spending a fortune, what are our alternatives? Any suggestions?
It’s been a few years now but I’ve built a few of these, one for the old club I once belonged to and another for my brother-in-law that has a grade crossing signal in his back yard and another for myself for another grade crossing signal.
I’m driving (IIRC) 1156 auto lamps.
I used a Potter-Brumfield CNS-35-64 programmable time delay relay. The model I had on hand has a 120 VAC input voltage but the relay contacts will switch whatever you want to input.
It has a 10 amp 30 VDC DPDT (max) relay output. Timing range is 0.1 second to 100 minute timing range. There must be a similar relay available out there. I got these when they were tossing them out at work.
There is a seven place DIP switch to program any of eight functions. I just looked at Digikey and they show 0 available.
And if you’re not too much of a purist, you could use LED lamps with automotive sockets in your grade crossing signal. I have a few railroad signals in my yard and by replacing the incandescent auto lamps with LEDs I dropped the current draw from about ten amps to less than one.
Of course, you don’t get the same “look” with LEDs, more like the present day ones. In my crossing signal I kept the original 10 volt lamps.
Don’t know if this would work for you … I have a set of crossing lights in my backyard and I got them to flash perfectly using an alternating flasher from a school bus ! Your local automotive parts supplier should be able to hook you up.
That would definitely work but I don’t think we want to spend the money on a commercial grade flashing unit. The heavy duty ones I have seen run about $60 Cdn. I have found cheaper ones on eBay but so far no Canadian suppliers. We are going to try Napa Auto Parts to see what they have.
The old flasher module has two knobs on it. When we first tried to adjust them nothing seemed to be working. However, one of our members decided to play around with the knobs and voila, he managed to get the flasher working. It turns out that the knobs have to be in very precise positions. If the knobs are even the slightest bit out of place nothing flashes, or it flashes very slowly.
The guy who fixed it was the same guy who pronounced it dead in the first place.[(-D][(-D] Not sure if I should thank him for his perseverence or kick him in the butt for wasting everyone’s time.[swg]